Share.

    33 commenti

    1. hamstar_potato on

      Of course the ones who have so much money don’t want to give the cheese away.

    2. Temporal_Integrity on

      Not just the richest man in France.

      He’s the richest person in Europe. 

    3. ApplicationMaximum84 on

      It’s a 2% tax, I would keep my mouth shut – it’s much smaller than I’d expect.

    4. Content_Log1708 on

      He simply can’t have more of a tax on his billions. He’s barely hanging on. Will no one think of the precious billionaires!

    5. leonardo-990 on

      Arnault was at trump’s inauguration. Tells a lot about the guy…

    6. Timauris on

      I guess a lot of people will be even more supportive of this tax because of this.

    7. RedAversion2025 on

      Then TAKE his billions away. He was at Orange hitlers inauguration event. Why is the world always so focused on hating the wrong 1%, they hate on immigrants, trans, minorities, but never the billionaires.

    8. utsuriga on

      My heart absolutely breaks for millionaires and billionaires who might have a tiny little bit less money if this passes, unless they find the loopholes carefully included so that they can keep their money, only it’s going to be a tiny bit more difficult to access.

      *my heart breaks, I tell you.*

    9. Holy shit, imagine having more money than 99.9% of people on this planet and still cry about a proposed 2% tax.

    10. HammerIsMyName on

      In other news: Children hate bedtime. More news at 8.

      No one gives a fuck what the rich thinks. Eat them.

    11. Reddit_User_385 on

      2% tax on billionaires and currently ~42% tax on working people in Germany.

      This is a joke.

    12. GeneralCommand4459 on

      I’m paraphrasing badly here, but someone once said that the rich should remember that taxes are the compromise society came up instead of storming the castle with pitchforks.

    13. Here is a graph with his wealth change:

      [https://www.inflationtool.com/adjusted-prices/bernard-arnault](https://www.inflationtool.com/adjusted-prices/bernard-arnault)

      While we, the peasants, were getting depression during COVID and the government printed a ton of money to keep things afloat since then, Arnault made 100B+. Just in case you are wondering where all that printed money is going.

    14. AlienInOrigin on

      If you tax the poor guy he’ll only be able to afford solid gold toilets in his 7 homes instead of gems encrusted platinum!

    15. Sarashana on

      Like most of his kind he thinks he has somehow “earned” that obscene wealth. I don’t think logic and reason will convince him otherwise.

    16. Spain has wealth tax. Just in case you are concerned, our billionaires are doing alright.

    17. SixEightL on

      And when he decides to leave France, and his whole industry away from France to set up industry in the US, the Left will probably demand that they forcefully retain his business and/or forcefully take over his business.

      Nothing like forced appropriation in the name of The Greater Good.

    18. Scargroth on

      A 2% tax is too much for him? Really? And there are people who worship these wealth hoarding dragons. JFC

    19. MaxPlease85 on

      I’m tired of this crap.

      Let’s settle it once for all. A giant Boxing ring.All billionaires and multi millionaires in one corner, non-billionaires in the other, and the loser team gets a 100% tax on every cent earned above a hundred Million dollars. Deal? Anyone for that, say Aye.

    20. PuzzledAsk8550 on

      Water is wet.
      Grass is green.
      Billionaire hates billionaire tax

    21. CaptainFil on

      What I don’t get is – if I had that much money and they proposed a tax like this, it wouldn’t even register. In what way will it impact anything that he is doing or wants to do?

      Billionaires should be seen as the system not working – nobody needs that kind of wealth and no single individual should have that much power (money = power in a capitalist system).

    22. Excellent_Ice2071 on

      Do you know the story of Bernard Arnault ?

      In 1981, François Mitterrand was elected President of France. Bernard Arnault, then 32 years old and already an ambitious real estate developer, panicked.

      Fearful of the socialist wave, he dreaded the worst : a “Bolshevization” of the French economy, or even a Soviet invasion of Europe at the height of the Cold War. He hastily liquidated his assets and fled to the United States in late 1981, taking his wife and daughters with him.

      In New York, Arnault tried to bounce back by launching a luxury real estate project (a high-end development in Palm Beach, Florida). But it was a disaster. The venture turned into a financial fiasco. He lost a fortune (around $15 million) and ended up sleeping on an air mattress in an empty apartment.

      Meanwhile, back in France, his former McKinsey colleague (where they had worked together in 1971–1972), Laurent Fabius, was rising through the ranks. Appointed Prime Minister in July 1984, Fabius oversaw the restructuring of struggling companies. One of the most pressing cases was Boussac Saint-Frères, a textile giant on the brink of collapse, owning Christian Dior, the Le Bon Marché department store, and numerous troubled factories.

      To save the group, the French government injected nearly 1 billion francs (about €300 million today). Arnault, now back in France in mid-1984 (penniless but with his valuable connections) saw an opportunity. Thanks to his political ties (including Fabius, who reportedly recommended him to the authorities), he won the bid to acquire Boussac for a symbolic sum.

      There was one strict condition : limit layoffs to preserve jobs. Arnault publicly committed, but once in control, he made a radical shift. He shut down factories and implemented massive restructuring plans, cutting over 9,000 of the 16,000 jobs. He kept only the ultra-profitable crown jewels: Christian Dior and Le Bon Marché.

      This bold move laid the foundation for the LVMH empire. Ironically, it was a socialist government that gave him the springboard to capitalist glory.

      (Translated from the French X account @p_duval)

    23. CaptchaSolvingRobot on

      Why should we have billionaires in our society, if they don’t contribute to society?

      Why fear them leaving, if they weren’t contributing to begin with?

    24. If you’re pissing off a billionaire with a suggestion, then it’s probably a good suggestion.

    25. drstruggleforlife on

      Wow, what a surprise… As far as billionaires go: they should not exist and we should take all their money.

    Leave A Reply